IoT Standards for Africa and Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
|
|
- Myrtle Watson
- 5 years ago
- Views:
Transcription
1 IST-Africa 2018 Conference Proceedings Paul Cunningham and Miriam Cunningham (Eds) IIMC International Information Management Corporation, 2018 ISBN: IoT Standards for Africa and Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Philippe COUSIN 1, Franck Le Gall 1, Congduc PHAM 2, Nelson MALAGUTI 3, Pierre-Yves DANET 4, Sebastien ZIEGLER 5 1 Easy Global Market, 2000 route des lucioles, Sophia Antipolis, 06901, France Tel: , (name.surname)@eglobalmark.com 2 Université Pau Pays de l Adour, Avenue de L université, Pau, 64000, France Tel: , congduc.pham@univ-pau.fr 3 International Telecommunication Union, Place des Nations, 1202 Geneva, Switzerland Tel : Nelson.Malaguti@itu.int 4 Orange, 2 Avenue Pierre Marzin, Lannion, France Tel: pierreyves.danet@orange.com 5 Mandat International, Chemin du Champ-Baron 3, 1209 Geneva, Switzerland Tel sziegler@mandint.org Abstract: IoT is a major worldwide topic but can really be deployed if there are well-established standards. Today there are some important actions on standardisation, which are promoted either by ITU, which has a major impact in Africa or directly adopted in Africa by some operators. This article presents such important activities. Keywords: ITU, IoT, standards, SDG, OneM2M, 5G, LPWAN, LoRaWAN, Sigfox, FIWARE 1. Introduction As reported in [1] in the WG3 standardisation of the Alliance for Internet of Things (IoT) Innovation [2], IoT requires and triggers the development of standards and protocols in order to allow heterogeneous devices to communicate and to leverage common software applications. Several standardization initiatives currently co-exist, in individual SDOs or partnerships (e.g. ETSI SmartM2M, ITU-T, ISO, IEC, ISO/IEC JTC 1, onem2m, W3C, IEEE, OASIS, IETF, etc.) and also in conjunction with a number of industrial initiatives (e.g. All Seen Alliance, Industrial Internet Consortium (IIC), Open Connectivity Foundation (OCF), Platform Industrie 4.0, Thread group, etc.). In front of the jungle of standards and in view of the importance of deploying IoT including with new radio technologies where African regulators might be attempted to issue new regulation, this article will provide some fact and guidelines in some important IoT standardisation activities which can impact the development of IoT in Africa in particular through the involvement of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) where recommendations are largely followed up in Africa. We will present some issues on radio matters as discussed by ITU-R and on IoT infrastructures promoted by onem2m standards about to be adopted by ITU-T. We will present other important standards deployed in Africa through the FIWARE programme. As Africa is also very concerned by its sustainable future, Africa must use standards that support the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and then we will present 10 keys actions on how IoT can address the 17 SDGs [3]. Copyright 2018 The authors Page 1 of 8
2 2. ITU-R View on Standards for Africa The ITU Global Standards Initiative on IoT defined the IoT as the infrastructure of the information society. It enables a wide range of devices to be sensed or controlled remotely and to exchange data through connection to the Internet network infrastructure. The range of application of IoT is very broad extending from smart clothing, to smart cities, to global monitoring systems. To meet these varied requirements, a range of access technologies, both wired and wireless, are required to provide access to the network. While most current IoT applications use wired technologies and short-range wireless technologies, these are now being augmented by the deployment of low power wide area networks and optimized mobile cellular and satellite systems. Different radiofrequency bands, many of which provide communication channels, infrastructure and capacity, could be used in IoT deployment with the aim of ensuring costeffective deployment and efficient use of the radiofrequency spectrum. In addition, IoT is a concept encompassing various platforms, applications, and technologies that are, and will continue to be, implemented under a number of radiocommunication services. Among many activities, those related to achieve harmonization for Short-Range Device (SRD) play an important role in successful deployment of IoT: Technical & operating parameters and spectrum use for SRDs (Rep. ITU-R SM.2153) and Frequency ranges for global/regional harmonization of SRDs (Rec. ITU-R SM.1896). Figure 1 shows some widely deployed SRD technologies in the sub-6ghz band. Source: Presentations at the ITU Workshop on Spectrum Management for IoT Deployment ( R/RSG1SG5 IoT 16) Figure 1: some widely deployed SRD technologies in the sub-6ghz band Another important activity is the support for massive machine-type communications within the framework of the standards and spectrum for IMT-Advanced (4G) and IMT (5G). In the short term, the current IMT-Advanced 4G standard (Rec. ITU-R M.2012) is being enhanced to include support for IoT (e.g. NB-IoT systems). In the longer term, IoT is seen as an integral element of the IMT G standard being developed in ITU extending the benefits of the IMT massive economies of scale and globally harmonized frequencies and standards to all industry sectors, see Figure 2. Figure 2: 5G usage scenario Copyright 2018 The authors Page 2 of 8
3 The framework and overall objectives of the future development of IMT for 2020 and beyond is detailed in Rec. ITU-R M There are specific studies on Wide-area Sensor and Actuator Network (WASN) Systems where the Automatic sensing and information collection functionality is of particular importance in the Africa context. 2 documents describe these studies: Rec. ITU-R M.2002 Objectives, characteristics and functional requirements of WASN systems to support machine-to-machine service applications irrespective of machine location and Rep. ITU-R M.2224 System design guidelines for WASN systems which provides detailed information for system design policy, the wireless applications and examples of WASN systems for information sharing. 3. Standards on Growing Interest for Long Range Low Power in Africa 3.1 Low-Power Wide Area Networks (LPWAN) technologies Traditional cellular network infrastructures (e.g., GSM/GPRS, 3G/4G) are still very expensive for deploying IoT devices on a large scale. Moreover, they are definitely not energy efficient for autonomous devices that must run on battery for years. Short-range technologies such as IEEE can eventually be used by implementing multi-hop routing to overcome the limited transmission range but this can only be envisaged with high node density and easy access to power in scenarios such as smart-cities environments. They can hardly be considered in isolated or rural environments. Recently, LPWAN concept based on ultra-narrow band modulation (UNB) for Sigfox [4] or Chirp Spread Spectrum modulation (CSS) for LoRa [4] has attracted attention with their capability to provide long range communication with a much lower power consumption to enable several years of operations on batteries. These technologies can achieve more than 15km in LOS condition and they definitely provide a better connectivity answer for battery-operated IoT by avoiding complex and costly relay nodes as a star topology with a central gateway can be deployed similar to cellular network topology. Therefore, even though these technologies are not yet standards endorsed by recognized standardization bodies, they can be considered as de-facto standards in the emerging LPWAN ecosystem. Obviously, Sigfox and LoRa are competitors targeting the same IoT segment. They are currently both using the sub-ghz unlicensed band to maximize technology uptake but nothing prevents them to use licensed-band in the future (thus avoiding strict duty-cycle regulations in unlicensed band). However, in addition to the different underlying physical modulation approach, Sigfox also differs from LoRa as it positions itself as an operator whereas LoRa is only the physical modulation techniques patented by Semtech company. Third parties can use LoRa products to deploy their own LoRa networks. Some third parties may be themselves operators with a traditional business model but some others can simply be end-users deploying their own ad-hoc LoRa networks. This variety of deployment scenarios is one main motivation behind the so-called LoRaWAN specification proposed by the LoRa Alliance to additionally defines common data and control channels, packet format, data link level commands, etc., for deploying nationwide networks with multiple gateways in an interoperable manner. LoRaWAN also defines 3 classes of end-device depending on the communication needs. Each class has its own set of service requirements that are also defined in the LoRaWAN specifications. Here, again, even though LoRaWAN is not a standard endorsed by recognized standardization bodies, it can be considered as one de-facto standard for LoRa-based networks. Figure 2 (left) illustrates the typical multi-tenant, nationwide LPWAN IoT topology showing end-devices, LPWAN gateways, Network & Application Servers and finally the end-users. Copyright 2018 The authors Page 3 of 8
4 Devices Gateways Network Servers Application Servers End-users IoT cloud IoT cloud LoRaWAN, SigFox LoRaWAN, TCP, UDP, MQTT, TCP, UDP, MQTT, LoRa HTTP REST API, MQTT, SMS HTTP REST API, MQTT, SMS Figure 2: typical nationwide LPWAN topology (left), simplified small-medium LPWAN topology (right) 3.2 What LPWAN standard for Africa? While the nationwide LPWAN architecture depicted in Figure 2(left) offers the highest data transparency level, it needs various network elements and heavily relies on high-quality Internet connectivity. In Africa, economy is still strongly based on very small to medium size businesses that are highly independent from each other, spread in remote and rural areas where SMS/USSD usage is still predominant. The main target of IoT in Africa is therefore to address small to medium size deployment scenarios for specific use cases instead of addressing large-scale, multi-purpose deployment scenarios. Figure 2(right) illustrates such a simplified architecture where LoRa technology is still the de-facto standard for connecting remote device to a gateway but the gateway is now a more versatile, open and flexible device capable of handling a larger variety of IoT frameworks independent from LPWAN operators. Moreover, by shifting from nationwide to smallmedium topologies such gateways can be built with low-cost hardware, running innovative open-source software such as those proposed by the EU H2020 WAZIUP and Agile projects. 4. Standards on ITU-OneM2M for Africa Beyond radio matters, it is important to have IoT standards and ITU is about to adopt the onem2m [5] specifications as the main industry driven standards for IoT. onem2m is a global standards initiative covering requirements, architecture, API specifications, security solutions and interoperability for Machine-to-Machine (M2M) and IoT technologies. onem2m was formed in 2012 and consists of eight of the world's preeminent standards development organizations: ARIB (Japan), ATIS (U.S.), CCSA (China), ETSI (Europe), TIA (U.S.), TSDSI (India), TTA (Korea), and TTC (Japan), together with six industry fora or consortia (Broadband Forum, Continua Alliance, Global Platform, Next Generation M2M Consortium, OMA) and over 200 member organizations. onem2m specifications provide a framework to support applications and services such as the smart grid, connected car, home automation, public safety, and health. onem2m actively encourages industry associations and forums with specific application requirements to participate in onem2m, in order to ensure that the developed solutions support their specific needs. Copyright 2018 The authors Page 4 of 8
5 Figure 3: OneM2M goal: IoT Cross domain Interoperability As far as the International Telecommunication Union is concerned, IoT has been defined in Recommendation ITU-T Y.2060 (06/2012) as a global infrastructure for the information society, enabling advanced services by interconnecting (physical and virtual) things based on existing and evolving interoperable information and communication technologies. The Global Standards Initiative on IoT (IoT-GSI) concluded its activities in July 2015 following TSAG decision to establish the new Study Group 20 on "IoT and its applications including smart cities and communities". All activities ongoing in the IoT-GSI were transferred to the SG20. Currently onem2m is working on its Release 3 which includes semantic interoperability, smart cities and industrial domain enablement. Release 3 builds on top of Release 2 set of specifications, currently proposed to ITU-T SG20 on IoT for a possible transposition into ITU-T recommendations. Adoption of onem2m standards will have a major impact in Africa 5. Standards for Future Network and Cloud in Africa FIWARE Case One important aspect for Africa is the capability to have, amongst others, cloud environments with advanced network features. Offering these demanded services by exporting in Africa the success stories of the FIWARE [6] program would be an efficient approach. The European Commission has funded the FIWARE program from 2011 to 2016 as the future network flagship project with the objective to develop an open platform facilitating application development in the fields of big data, IoT and Cloud. Such a platform should be able to collect information from different sources such as IoT networks, open data, user data, and store them in a standard model in order to be easily used by application developers. For that reason, the first idea was to reuse a well-known data structure standard NGSI coming from OMA (Open Mobile Alliance). This standard was able to support most of the requirements from the different vertical sectors supported by FIWARE (Smart City, Smart Agri and Smart Industry). The platform provides enhanced OpenStack-based Cloud capabilities and a set of tools and libraries known as Generic Enablers (GEs) with public and open-source specifications and interfaces. These FIWARE GEs are distributed in different technical chapters and provide different capacities. For example, the IoT chapter provides tools to connect sensors and other devices; while the applications chapter offers powerful business intelligence tools and for the development of interfaces; or as the chapter for Advanced Interfaces allows to implement functionalities related to virtual reality, augmented reality or 3D. Copyright 2018 The authors Page 5 of 8
6 Among other initiatives to adopt FIWARE as Smart City platform, more than 100 cities from European countries (but also outside Europe) are belonging to the Open & Agile Smart Cities initiative which is based on four main strategic elements: (1) adopting common APIS accessing data from cities through NGSI, (2) adopting a common platform for the publication of data such as CKAN, (3) working on a driven-by-implementation basis and on building applications allowing to reuse and (4) improve and define data models for different vertical markets in cities and to prove the interoperability in a city and among different cities. To that purpose, existing initiatives and models like CitySDK will be used. Figure 4:Fiware IoT& context management altogether In order to extend the capacity of the data structure and also to align with other existing standards in this area, ETSI has created of a new Industry Specification Group on crosssector Context Information Management (ISG CIM) [7] for IoT-enabled applications. The group will focus its activities on developing the specifications for a common CIM API, Data Publication platforms and standard Data Models, in order to achieve and improve cross-sector interoperability for smart applications, with FIWARE NGSI as starting point. With regards to the success in Europe, some partners who have business outside Europe took the opportunity to use such an open solution in countries outside Europe (Latin America, North America, Asia, India and Africa). Orange is leading the initiative in Africa because the number of countries operated. The most advance case is Senegal where a FIWARE Lab is already operational and used for pilots in the domain of Smart Agriculture using LoRa IoT networks. Last but not least, initiatives also exist in Ivory Coast, Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Ghana, etc. where platforms and pilots are being investigated. In Senegal, a FIWARE platform is already running and open to support applications from European startups to showcase capacity of the solution but also from African developers. In order to do so, an accelerator able to support developer is being setup together with the European Commission. It has the following objectives: 1. Collect local information in order to feed the FIWARE database in partnership with the UCAD university, 2. Organise call for proposals inviting developers to submit innovative service propositions that could take advantage of the FIWARE technology in the Senegal priority domains (Agriculture, Environment including cities), 3. Fund and incubate a number of these ideas in order to put on the market useful services for citizens. The idea is to replicate such a methodology in other African and Mediterranean countries in order to help service development in the domains of Smart Environment/Smarty city and Smart Agriculture, there are already initiatives in Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt and Cote d Ivoire. Worth to say that a study of interest based on IST Africa Copyright 2018 The authors Page 6 of 8
7 2015 outputs shown that the following African countries should have interest in IoT, Big Data and cloud looking to their respective research capacities (Botswana, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda) 6. IoT Standards for SDGs IoT is emerging as a powerful enabler in many application domains, such as water and energy management, environmental monitoring, health, smart cities, smart industry and supply chain management. IoT has the potential to address some of the most acute human, economic and environmental needs. It can also directly contribute to reach the objectives of SDGs: emerging IoT paradigm has the potential to create an efficient, effective and secure ecosystem taking advantage of connected devices for managing the major global challenges faced by this, and future generations. In this context, at the 7th IoT Week held in Geneva in June 2017, the IoT research and industry community, together with ITU and other stakeholders, took the opportunity to express their support for researching, developing and leveraging IoT technologies for sustainable development and for building a brighter future for our planet and its inhabitants. Participants of the IoT Week 2017 declared to strive to promote international dialogue and cooperation for innovation in IoT with regard to the following 10 key activities : Promoting the development and adoption of IoT technologies for the benefit of humanity, the environment and sustainable development. This includes promoting the research and the use of IoT technologies to address the 17 Sustainable Development Goals adopted by the United Nations and the international community. Governments and policy-makers from developed and developing countries should be encouraged to examine the future challenges and benefits to their economies and accelerate global competitiveness of their economy, region, continent and people by establishing plans and strategies to leverage IoT for SDGs. Supporting the implementation of the IoT in urban and rural context to foster the application of ICTs in providing services to build smarter and more sustainable cities and communities. This will allow urban and community stakeholders to take advantage of technological advances and offer new opportunities for quality of life for different strata of society, by promoting accessibility to amenities, technologies and services (including social infrastructure, energy, water and healthcare), and by supporting IoT systems and data interoperability. Promoting a broad, vibrant and secure ecosystem for IoT, including support for start-ups and incubators. This includes promoting policies to facilitate research, innovation and development of new solutions and eliminating policies that restrict job creation, hinder economic growth or prevent innovation. It may also include appropriate incentives, and policies to promote IoT deployment, privacy protection and secure data management. This will gradually assist in fostering an IoT data market, which contributes to the consolidation stakeholders. Encouraging the development and implementation of standards that facilitate interoperability among IoT technologies and solutions in order to pave the way to an open and interoperable IoT ecosystem, with cost-effective solutions in line with the vision for an open economy. Adopting new and innovative IoT applications to deal with challenges associated with hunger, water supply, and food security through resource monitoring to cope with the increasing consumption needs of a global population. By leveraging IoT, sensors can detect and monitor water leaks, potential contamination, soil moisture, pollutions, weather conditions, livestock movements, while remotely managing and controlling harvesters and irrigation equipment to improve the quality, quantities, yield rates, cost-effectiveness, energy efficiency and sustainability of agricultural production, including the Copyright 2018 The authors Page 7 of 8
8 packaging and transportation of food supplies. IoT can also be used for research and analysis into water-borne diseases and potentially new types of diseases. Galvanizing interest in the use of IoT for risk reduction and climate change mitigation, taking into consideration the diversity and complexity of the Earth s geography and vulnerable populations. The IoT framework has the ability to gather and analyze real-time information for proactive prevention and faster response to deal with toxic wastes and pollutants, disasters and other natural calamities Identifying and supporting the growing trend of using IoT technologies for education and improving the access of disadvantaged and excluded groups to ICT infrastructure by promoting basic ICT literacy, virtual classrooms and interactive vocational training programmes for vulnerable segments of society. Embracing the application and use of IoT for biodiversity conservation and ecological monitoring to protect the natural life and its diversity on land, air and below waters. IoT can help monitor natural ecosystems, as well as sanctuaries, detect threats linked to poaching, overfishing (or illegal fishing) and deforestation and can send alerts in real-time to authorities for immediate response. Contributing to global research and discussions on IoT for smart and sustainable cities through global initiatives such as United for Smart Sustainable Cities (U4SSC). ICT-based transformative action for sustainable urban development can help highlight efficient, transparent, and equitable regulatory frameworks, inclusive planning systems, effective financial management with increased transparency and accountability to all inhabitants and urban stakeholders alike, which should help accelerate the transition to smart sustainable cities and communities. Promoting international dialogue and cooperation on the IoT for sustainable development by bringing the various stakeholders together, including inter alia the academic and research community, the specialized international organizations and fora, the industry, SMEs and start-ups, the governments and public authorities (including smart cities), and other relevant stakeholders such as specialized NGOs and indigenous peoples 7. Conclusions As reported in [8].Africa is the cockpit of change in terms of the global digital transformation. Internet users have gone from a few thousand to millions over the past decade. IoT is also seen as a major driver for Africa [9] and in that context it is important to ensure smooth adoption of IoT standards in Africa. On the basis of the previous section we recommend that : 1- IoT standards in particular from ITU and onem2m should be promoted also in view of addressing Sustainable Development goals 2- SDRs technologies such as long range, low energy like LORA in unlicensed radio band should be promoted in Africa 3- Open platform with open source generic enablers such as FIWARE should be promoted in Africa to replicate EU success stories in stimulating innovations and creating of new SMEs and start-ups. References [1] [2] [3] [4] SIGFOX and LORA [5] [6] FIWARE [7] CIM Context Information Management [8] [9] Copyright 2018 The authors Page 8 of 8
Internet of Things: Cross-cutting Integration Platforms Across Sectors
Internet of Things: Cross-cutting Integration Platforms Across Sectors Dr. Ovidiu Vermesan, Chief Scientist, SINTEF DIGITAL EU-Stakeholder Forum, 31 January-01 February, 2017, Essen, Germany IoT - Hyper-connected
More informationIERC Standardization Challenges. Standards for an Internet of Things. 3 and 4 July 2014, ETSI HQ (Sophia Antipolis)
www.internet-of-things-research.eu Standardization Challenges Standards for an Internet of Things 3 and 4 July 2014, ETSI HQ (Sophia Antipolis) Workshop co-organized by EC DG Connect and ETSI Dr. Ovidiu
More informationINTERNET OF THINGS THE GSMA GUIDE TO THE R A G E C A P A B I L C O V E I T Y T Y U R I E C R S B E C Y. gsma.com/iot
C O V E R A G E C A P A B I L I T Y THE GSMA GUIDE TO THE INTERNET OF THINGS T Y C Y B E R S E C U R I SCALING THE IoT Enabling a world in which consumers and businesses enjoy rich new services, connected
More informationSpectrum Management Aspects Enabling IoT Implementation
Regional Seminar for Europe and CIS Management and Broadcasting 29-31 May 2017 Hotel Roma Aurelia Antica, Convention Centre Rome, Italy Management Aspects Enabling IoT Implementation Pavel Mamchenkov,
More informationUPDATE ON IOT LANDSCAPING
UPDATE ON IOT LANDSCAPING ETSI STF 505 Jumoke Ogunbekun IoT in the Smart Home Workshop, 21 st to 22 nd March 2015, Sophia Antipolis, France Outline Starting point for TR 103 375 The AIOTI initiative AIOTI
More informationSPECIALIST TASK FORCE 505 IOT STANDARDS LANDSCAPING & IOT LSP GAP ANALYSIS
SPECIALIST TASK FORCE 505 IOT STANDARDS LANDSCAPING & IOT LSP GAP ANALYSIS IoT Landscape Status and Results Final STF 505 Presentation Workshop Jumoke Ogunbekun February 7, 2017 - Brussels ETSI TR 103
More informationA Vision of IoT: Applications, Challenges, and Opportunities With China Perspective
A Vision of IoT: Applications, Challenges, and Opportunities With China Perspective SHANZHI CHEN, HUI XU, DAKE LIU, BO HU, AND HUCHENG WANG Definitions of IoT from Different Organizations: Organizations
More informationDr. Tanja Rückert EVP Digital Assets and IoT, SAP SE. MSB Conference Oct 11, 2016 Frankfurt. International Electrotechnical Commission
Dr. Tanja Rückert EVP Digital Assets and IoT, SAP SE MSB Conference Oct 11, 2016 Frankfurt International Electrotechnical Commission Approach The IEC MSB decided to write a paper on Smart and Secure IoT
More informationStandard for an Architectural Framework for the Internet of Things
Standard for an Architectural Framework for the Internet of Things IEEE P2413 Philippe Nappey Strategy & Technology Schneider Electric ETSI M2M Workshop Sophia Antipolis, France 10 December, 2014 IoT The
More informationEmerging IoT Technologies for Smart Cities
07.11.2017 U4IoT Contact Dr sziegler@mandint.org IoT-related International Engagement ITU-T Member Rapporteur on Research and Emerging Technologies for the Internet of Things and Smart Cities (SG20) Cybersecurity
More informationITU Smart Sustainable Cities and Communities Initiatives: Towards a Smart Global Vision Bilbao, Spain June IoT Week 2018 #IoT4SCC. Ramy A.
ITU Smart Sustainable Cities and Communities Initiatives: Towards a Smart Global Vision Bilbao, Spain 04-07 June IoT Week 2018 #IoT4SCC Ramy A. Fathy SG20 Vice chairman Cities are facing a rapid urbanization
More informationITU-T Y Reference architecture for Internet of things network capability exposure
I n t e r n a t i o n a l T e l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n U n i o n ITU-T Y.4455 TELECOMMUNICATION STANDARDIZATION SECTOR OF ITU (10/2017) SERIES Y: GLOBAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE, INTERNET PROTOCOL
More informationITU-T Y.4552/Y.2078 (02/2016) Application support models of the Internet of things
I n t e r n a t i o n a l T e l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n U n i o n ITU-T TELECOMMUNICATION STANDARDIZATION SECTOR OF ITU Y.4552/Y.2078 (02/2016) SERIES Y: GLOBAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE, INTERNET
More informationIOT TECHNOLOGY & BUSINESS. Format: Online Academy. Duration: 5 Modules
IOT TECHNOLOGY & BUSINESS Format: Online Academy Duration: 5 Modules IOT TECHNOLOGY & BUSINESS PROGRAMME COURSE OVERVIEW IoT is the next big thing for both operators and associated industries. However
More informationInternet of things (IoT) Regulatory aspects. Trilok Dabeesing, ICT Authority 28 June 2017
Internet of things (IoT) Regulatory aspects 1 Trilok Dabeesing, ICT Authority 28 June 2017 2 IoT Regulatory aspects IoT - the interconnection via the Internet of computing devices embedded in everyday
More informationIntroduction to the ITU-T Global Standards Initiative on IoT with focus on SG13 activities
ITU Workshop on the Internet of Things - Trend and Challenges in Standardization (Geneva, Switzerland, 18 February 2014) Introduction to the ITU-T Global Standards Initiative on IoT with focus on SG13
More informationIoT trends in the Americas and considerations on the importance of National IoT plans
IoT trends in the Americas and considerations on the importance of National IoT plans An overview of the activity in the APAC region Lucas Gallitto Technology and Policy Manager GSMA Lima, Peru August
More informationITU-T Y Functional framework and capabilities of the Internet of things
I n t e r n a t i o n a l T e l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n U n i o n ITU-T Y.2068 TELECOMMUNICATION STANDARDIZATION SECTOR OF ITU (03/2015) SERIES Y: GLOBAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE, INTERNET PROTOCOL
More informationESTABLISHING THE NORM
ESTABLISHING THE NORM An Introduction to IoT Standards MARCH 2017 Produced by Contents Summary... 3 Introduction to Issues Driving the Standards Discussion... 4 Interoperability... 4 Security................................................5
More informationArchitecture of Industrial IoT
Architecture of Industrial IoT December 2, 2016 Marc Nader @mourcous Branches of IoT IoT Consumer IoT (Wearables, Cars, Smart homes, etc.) Industrial IoT (IIoT) Smart Gateways Wireless Sensor Networks
More informationIoThings Milano Maggio 2017 Barbara Pareglio GSMA IoT Technical Director. Mobile IoT: 3GPP standard per reti LPWA e IoT security
IoThings Milano Maggio 2017 Barbara Pareglio GSMA IoT Technical Director Mobile IoT: 3GPP standard per reti LPWA e IoT security 2 Introduction of the GSMA Content Understanding IoT and the market opportunity
More informationInternet of Things Telecommunication operator perspective
Internet of Things Telecommunication operator perspective Pierre Rust 1 MINES Saint-Étienne, CNRS Lab Hubert Curien UMR 5516 2 Orange Labs UMR CNRS 5516 SAINT-ETIENNE Goal: Giving you overview of the perspective
More informationInternet of Things (IoT)
Internet of Things (IoT) Aims of this session Define IoT Understanding the technology behind IoT Analysis of Operational aspects of IoT Understanding IoT business models Explore the policy and regulatory
More informationIoT Egypt Forum A Catalyst for IoT Ecosystem in Egypt
IoT Egypt Forum A Catalyst for IoT Ecosystem in Egypt IoT: Connecting the Unconnected 2020 2015 25 Billion 50 Billion Today s Most Dynamic Business Opportunity IoT in Simple Terms Ordinary objects from
More informationDELL: POWERFUL FLEXIBILITY FOR THE IOT EDGE
DELL: POWERFUL FLEXIBILITY FOR THE IOT EDGE ABSTRACT Dell Edge Gateway 5000 Series represents a blending of exceptional compute power and flexibility for Internet of Things deployments, offering service
More informationInternet of Things (IoT) Vikram Raval GSMA
Internet of Things (IoT) Vikram Raval GSMA Introductions 2 Your objectives What do you expect to learn from this course? How is it relevant to you? 3 Themes Understanding the benefits IoT can bring Key
More informationITU-T Y Specific requirements and capabilities of the Internet of things for big data
I n t e r n a t i o n a l T e l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n U n i o n ITU-T Y.4114 TELECOMMUNICATION STANDARDIZATION SECTOR OF ITU (07/2017) SERIES Y: GLOBAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE, INTERNET PROTOCOL
More informationJTC 1/SC 41. François Coallier, PhD, Eng. Chair, ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC41 ITU-T RFG, ITU-T RFG
JTC 1/SC 41 ITU-T RFG, 2017-11-19 François Coallier, PhD, Eng. Chair, ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC41 francois.coallier @etsmtl.ca http://www.elmofoto.com/northerncalifornia-3/northern-california/i-wcm58rn/a 1 http://cladirect.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/theinternetofthings.jpg
More informationNew Technologies: 4G/LTE, IOTs & OTTS WORKSHOP
New Technologies: 4G/LTE, IOTs & OTTS WORKSHOP EACO Title: LTE, IOTs & OTTS Date: 13 th -17 th May 2019 Duration: 5 days Location: Kampala, Uganda Course Description: This Course is designed to: Give an
More informationYour partner in testing the Internet of Things
Your partner in testing the Internet of Things The power of testing in all phases of the product lifecycle The majority of devices sensors, actors, gateways building the Internet of Things (IoT) use wireless
More informationPROTOTYPE OF IOT ENABLED SMART FACTORY. HaeKyung Lee and Taioun Kim. Received September 2015; accepted November 2015
ICIC Express Letters Part B: Applications ICIC International c 2016 ISSN 2185-2766 Volume 7, Number 4(tentative), April 2016 pp. 1 ICICIC2015-SS21-06 PROTOTYPE OF IOT ENABLED SMART FACTORY HaeKyung Lee
More informationThe Importance of Connectivity in the IoT Roadmap End-User Sentiment Towards IoT Connectivity. An IDC InfoBrief, Sponsored by February 2018
The Importance of Connectivity in the IoT Roadmap End-User Sentiment Towards IoT Connectivity An IDC InfoBrief, Sponsored by February 2018 IDC s IoT Definition IDC defines IoT as a network of networks
More informationThe IoT and the Technical Information Challenge. Stuart Mendelsohn
The IoT and the Technical Information Challenge Stuart Mendelsohn 1 About me From UK (Manchester) 4 years learning how to dig up dead people (archaeologist) Electronics was a hobby and then studied electronics/computing
More informationIOT DEVELOPER SURVEY RESULTS. April 2017
IOT DEVELOPER SURVEY RESULTS April 2017 SURVEY INTRODUCTION The Eclipse IoT Working Group, IEEE IoT, AGILE IoT and IoT Council cosponsored an online survey to better understand how developers are building
More informationIoT Strategy Roadmap
IoT Strategy Roadmap Ovidiu Vermesan, SINTEF ROAD2CPS Strategy Roadmap Workshop, 15 November, 2016 Brussels, Belgium IoT-EPI Program The IoT Platforms Initiative (IoT-EPI) program includes the research
More informationFOSS PLATFORM FOR CLOUD BASED IOT SOLUTIONS
FOSS PLATFORM FOR CLOUD BASED IOT SOLUTIONS FOSDEM 2018 04.02.2018 Bosch Software Innovations GmbH Dr. Steffen Evers Head of Open Source Services Eclipse Kuksa Demo Open Source Connected Car Platform In-Vehicle
More informationIndia s perspective on IoT in smart cities program
India s perspective on IoT in smart cities program Emerging IoT solutions in developing countries Shutterstock image: Rashtrapati Bhawan at night, New Delhi Some Facts Population 2 nd Highest [1,326,801,576
More informationIoT Landscape Challenges and Solution Approaches Standardized platforms and architectures providing interoperability
IoT Landscape Challenges and Solution Approaches Standardized platforms and architectures providing interoperability Presented by Joachim Koss ETSI STF 505-IoT Leader for Delta Technology Day: Internet
More informationInternet of Things and Smart Cities & Communities Convergence
Internet of Things and Smart Cities & Communities Convergence Bilbao, IoT Week, 6 June 2018 Olavi Luotonen Internet of Things DG Communications Networks, Content and Technology European Commission Together
More informationRecomm I n t e r n a t i o n a l T e l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n U n i o n
Recomm I n t e r n a t i o n a l T e l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n U n i o n ITU-T Y.4115 TELECOMMUNICATION STANDARDIZATION SECTOR OF ITU (04/2017) SERIES Y: GLOBAL INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE, INTERNET
More informationSpectrum for the Internet of Things
Spectrum for the Internet of Things GSMA Public Policy Position August 2016 COPYRIGHT 2017 GSM ASSOCIATION 2 SPECTRUM FOR THE INTERNET OF THINGS Summary The Internet of Things (IoT) is a hugely important
More informationIntroduction to the Internet of Things
Introduction to the Internet of Things Marco Zennaro, PhD Telecommunications/ICT4D Lab The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics Trieste, Italy Introduction to IoT Vision History of
More informationChapter 2. Analysis of ICT Industrial Trends in the IoT Era. Part 1
Chapter 2 Analysis of ICT Industrial Trends in the IoT Era This chapter organizes the overall structure of the ICT industry, given IoT progress, and provides quantitative verifications of each market s
More informationCOURSE DESCRIPTION INTERNET OF THINGS- BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGIES. Format: Classroom. Duration: 2 Days
COURSE DESCRIPTION INTERNET OF THINGS- BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGIES Format: Classroom Duration: 2 Days COURSE SUMMARY Exposure to the latest IoT analysis from Ovum experts Technology trends and standards
More informationF5 Network Security for IoT
OVERVIEW F5 Network Security for IoT Introduction As networked communications continue to expand and grow in complexity, the network has increasingly moved to include more forms of communication. This
More informationEvolution to Broadband Triple play An EU research and policy perspective
Evolution to Broadband Triple play An EU research and policy perspective Jeanne De Jaegher European Commission DG Information Society and Media http://www.cordis.lu/ist/directorate_d/audiovisual/index.htm
More informationRADIO SPECTRUM POLICY GROUP. A Spectrum Roadmap for IoT. Opinion on the Spectrum Aspects of the Internet-of-things (IoT) including M2M
EUROPEAN COMMISSION Directorate-General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology Electronic Communications Networks and Services Radio Spectrum Policy Group RSPG Secretariat Brussels, 09 November
More informationWhat you need to know about IoT platforms. How platforms stack up in IoT
What you need to know about IoT platforms How platforms stack up in IoT 80 billion connected devices by 2025. 1 IoT success depends on assembling the right pieces on a flexible foundation that can support
More informationThe BIGGEST. The 2 nd Saudi International Exhibition & Conference for Internet of Things February 2019
Government Partner Redefining Communications The 2 nd Saudi International Exhibition & Conference for Internet of Things 13-15 February 2019 Riyadh International Convention & Exhibition Center www.saudiiot.com
More informationTHE TRANSFER CENTER INTERNET OF THINGS (IOT) LAB
THE TRANSFER CENTER INTERNET OF THINGS (IOT) LAB DEMONSTRATION, DEVELOPMENT AND TEST CENTER FOR IOT TECHNOLOGIES We support our customers from recognizing and understanding IoT technologies to strategy
More informationSURVEY All brands and products are the trademarks of their respective holder/s. Copyright Decisive Media Limited. All rights reserved.
1 2 WHAT HAPPENS WHEN IoT MEETS THE TELCO? This year we conducted a survey of our viewers opinions and asked them: What s going to happen when the long-expected Internet of Things (IoT) meets the telco.
More informationDemystifying 5G. RIPE NCC Menog 16. Jad El
Demystifying 5G RIPE NCC Menog 16 Jad El Cham @jad_elcham IoT Agenda Defining what 5G is Key Drivers / Technology Requirements Use Cases What 5G isn't Implications of 5G on Mobile Operators The IoT business
More informationPoLTE: The GPS Alternative for IoT Location Services
PoLTE: The GPS Alternative for IoT Location Services A Cost-Effective New Cellular IoT Location Solution that is Power Efficient, Low Cost and Rapidly Scalable Global positioning system (GPS) has been
More informationMiddleware for the Internet of Things Revision : 536
Middleware for the Internet of Things Revision : 536 Chantal Taconet SAMOVAR, Télécom SudParis, CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay September 2017 Outline 1. Internet of Things (IoT) 2. Middleware for the IoT
More informationRUCKUS IoT SUITE DATA SHEET BENEFITS
Organizations seeking to deploy IoT solutions face a complex, fragmented ecosystem of standards, devices and services that often slows or stalls enterprise IoT deployments. BENEFITS REUSE EXISTING INFRASTRUCTURE
More informationChina IoT Standardization
SESEC III Webinar on EU & China IoT Standardization China IoT Standardization Dr. Betty Xu Seconded European Standardization Expert in China (SESEC) Beijing, 11 th April 2017 SESEC III Webinar on EU &
More informationIntroduction of digital TV in Bosnia and Herzegovina - Support for Public Broadcasting System
Introduction of digital TV in Bosnia and Herzegovina - Support for Public Broadcasting System Prof. dr Branko Dokić Member of the House of Representatives of the Parliamentary Assembly od BiH Why DTV?
More informationT : Internet Technologies for Mobile Computing
T-110.7111: Internet Technologies for Mobile Computing Overview of IoT Platforms Julien Mineraud Post-doctoral researcher University of Helsinki, Finland Wednesday, the 9th of March 2016 Julien Mineraud
More informationInternet of Things and Smart Cities: advances, perspectives, challenges in some technical areas including standardization
ITU Arab Forum on Emerging Technologies Algiers Algeria, 14-15 Feb. 2018 Internet of Things and Smart Cities: advances, perspectives, challenges in some technical areas including standardization Presented
More informationSTANDARDS ECOSYSTEM, WHAT S NEW?
IoT week Geneva, 8 June 2017 IoT STANDARDS ECOSYSTEM, WHAT S NEW? www.aioti.eu Patrick Guillemin WG3 (IoT Standardisation) Chair and Steering Board member 1 The development of the The Alliance for Internet
More informationRECENT TRENDS AND ISSUES IN IOT
RECENT TRENDS AND ISSUES IN IOT *K.Yogitha, **V.Alamelumangai *Research Scholar, Department of E&I, Annamalai University **Professor, Department of E&I, Annamalai University ABSTRACT The term IOT refers
More informationIoT Challenges in H2020. Mirko Presser, MSci, MSc, BSS/BTECH/MBIT Lab
IoT Challenges in H2020 Mirko Presser, MSci, MSc, PhD @mirkopresser mirko.presser@btech.au.dk BSS/BTECH/MBIT Lab iotcomicbook.org 2 IoT will turn the world into data. - Kevin Ashton 3 4 2009 5 Applied
More informationReview of Regional Activities
ITU-D D Regional Development Forum for the Arab Region: Access to spectrum, including broadcasting services trends and technologies Tunis Tunisia, 1-31 3 June 2009 Review of Regional Activities Dr. Miloud
More informationCoverage where you need it, made easy!
Sigfox Access Station Micro SMBS-T4 Coverage where you need it, made easy! Improve Sigfox device coverage indoor and outdoor Version : September 2018 Easy to install Cost efficient The Sigfox Access Station
More informationDo you have a mature IoT solution? Join us with the Open Call. Alicia Cano - Medtronic.
Do you have a mature IoT solution? Join us with the Open Call Alicia Cano - Medtronic www.activageproject.eu ACTIVAGE MISSION Contribute to the older people well-being to prolong an active and healthy
More informationIoT Enabler, from the Things to the Services and Service Platform
IoT Enabler, from the Things to the Services and Service Platform Dr. Byung K Lim InterDigital Asia/VP Innovations Labs Seoul, Korea October 28, 2015 2015 InterDigital Inc. All Rights Reserved. 1 1 IoT
More informationSPECIALIST TASK FORCE 505 IOT STANDARDS LANDSCAPING & IOT LSP GAP ANALYSIS. Objectives and deliverables. ETSI All rights reserved
SPECIALIST TASK FORCE 505 IOT STANDARDS LANDSCAPING & IOT LSP GAP ANALYSIS Objectives and deliverables Final STF 505 Presentation Workshop Joachim Koss February 7, 2017 - Brussels ETSI 2017. All rights
More informationIoT European. Programme. Large-Scale Pilots Projects
IoT European Large-Scale Pilots Programme Large-Scale Pilots Projects COntent Projects ACTIVAGE AUTOPILOT IoF2020 MONICA SyncroniCity CREATE-IoT U4IoT 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Dear reader, This brochure
More informationFronthaul solutions
Fronthaul solutions - 2016 Wireless fronthaul applications Technology & solutions Roadmap & value proposition Fronthaul use cases Annex: market trends Leading Fronthaul Technologies Leading fronthaul solutions
More informationIoT-based Monitoring System using Tri-level Context Making for Smart Home Services
IOSR Journal of Electrical and Electronics Engineering (IOSR-JEEE) e-issn: 2278-1676,p-ISSN: 2320-3331, Volume 11, Issue 4 Ver. I (Jul. Aug. 2016), PP 01-05 www.iosrjournals.org IoT-based Monitoring System
More informationConclusion and Way Forward. Satoshi Miyaji Chairman of ITU-T SG9, KDDI, Japan
ITU Workshop on TV and content delivery on Integrated Broadband Cable Networks Hangzhou, China, 26 May 2017 http://www.itu.int/en/itu-t/workshops-and-seminars/201705/pages/programme.aspx Conclusion and
More informationMeasuring the Internet of Things (IoT)
Measuring the Internet of Things (IoT) A Regulator s Perspective João Noronha, ANACOM (Portugal) 16.11.2017 1 Index 1. The Internet of Things (IoT) 2. IoT, public policy and regulation 3. Measuring the
More informationCOMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES
COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES Brussels, 02.02.2006 COM(2006) 37 final COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND
More informationMirth Solutions. Powering Healthcare Transformation.
Mirth Solutions Powering Healthcare Transformation. You re on a mission to... Eliminate costly information gaps and duplications that make it hard to integrate information and achieve interoperability.
More informationEBU view How should we use the digital dividend?
EBU view How should we use the digital dividend? Long-term public interest versus short-term profit Revised April 2009 CONTENT How should we use the digital dividend? The EBU s key concerns Why is the
More informationINTERNET OF THINGS WINNING FORMULA. Rami Avidan Managing Director, Tele2 IoT
INTERNET OF THINGS WINNING FORMULA Rami Avidan Managing Director, Tele2 IoT www.tele2.com/iot twitter.com/@tele2iot rami.avidan@tele2.com WHO are we Tele2 at a Glance 9+1 Countries* 2.83 Net sales EUR
More informationSpectrum Allocation and Licensing of Internet of Things (IoT) in Thailand
Spectrum Allocation and Licensing of Internet of Things (IoT) in Thailand Settapong Malisuwan 1, Wassana Kaewphanuekrungsi 2, Office of National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission, Thailand
More informationPrime Minister's Advisory Council on Cyber Security - Industry Working Group on IoT
Prime Minister's Advisory Council on Cyber Security - Industry Working Group on IoT AIIA feedback October 2017 Ground Suite B 7-11 Barry Drive Turner ACT 2612 GPO Box 573 Canberra ACT 2601 61 2 6281 9400
More informationTHE NEXT GENERATION OF CITY MANAGEMENT INNOVATE TODAY TO MEET THE NEEDS OF TOMORROW
THE NEXT GENERATION OF CITY MANAGEMENT INNOVATE TODAY TO MEET THE NEEDS OF TOMORROW SENSOR Owlet is the range of smart control solutions offered by the Schréder Group. Owlet helps cities worldwide to reduce
More informationISELED - A Bright Future for Automotive Interior Lighting
ISELED - A Bright Future for Automotive Interior Lighting Rev 1.1, October 2017 White Paper Authors: Roland Neumann (Inova), Robert Isele (BMW), Manuel Alves (NXP) Contents More than interior lighting...
More informationThe Importance of Satellite Access to C Band Spectrum In Africa September 2012
The Importance of Satellite Access to C Band Spectrum In Africa September 2012 INTRODUCTION Satellite systems and networks require hundreds of millions of Euros of investment, and years of advance planning
More informationERAdiate lecture series
ERAdiate lecture series Connected and Autonomous Driving Environment perception for Autonomous Driving Zilina François Fischer (ERTICO) 8 October 2018 This project has received funding from the European
More informationUNIFY-IoT Project Presentation
Supporting Internet of Things Activities on Innovation Ecosystems UNIFY-IoT Project Presentation AIOTI ALLIANCE FOR INTERNET OF THINGS INNOVATION Ovidiu Vermesan, SINTEF, Norway (AIOTI WG01/IERC Chair)
More informationThe Rise of the Internet of Things
The Rise of the Internet of Things Wi-SUN Alliance IoT Industry Research Contents 3 Executive Summary 3 Introduction Priorities Point to IoT 4 What s Driving IoT? 4 Reaping the Rewards 5 Maturity in IoT
More informationMobile IoT for Smart Cities: Open for Business. Svetlana Grant Future IoT Networks Director Connected Living Programme 17 November 2016
Mobile IoT for Smart Cities: Open for Business Svetlana Grant Future IoT Networks Director Connected Living Programme 17 November 2016 GSMA Connected Living Programme MOBILISING THE INTERNET OF THINGS
More informationIoT Challenges & Testing aspects. Alon Linetzki, Founder & CEO QualityWize
IoT Challenges & Testing aspects Alon Linetzki, Founder & CEO QualityWize alonl@quality-wize.com 1 Alon Linetzki CEO and Founder of QualityWize 3 decades in sw engineering, testing, quality assurance and
More informationMobilising the Smart Cities September Barbara Pareglio IoT Technical Director
1 Mobilising the Smart Cities September 2017 Barbara Pareglio IoT Technical Director Introduction of the GSMA 2 2 MILLIONS USD Millions(Real) Market Sizing the IoT opportunity 3 IoT Connections in APAC
More informationShowcase C: Korea USA. Japan (Germany) Germany. Smart City Services and Multiple Service Layer Platforms Interworking
Korea KETI & SKT & ntels USA CONVIDA Wireless Japan (Germany) NEC Laboratories Europe Germany Fraunhofer FOKUS Showcase C: Smart City Services and Multiple Service Layer Platforms Interworking KETI Convida
More informationIOT TECHNOLOGY AND ITS IMPACT
Presentation at the ABA National IOT Institute, Jones Day, Washington DC March 30, 2016 IOT TECHNOLOGY AND ITS IMPACT DR. VIJAY K. MADISETTI PROFESSOR OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING GEORGIA TECH
More informationTHE EVOLUTION OF DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL DISTRIBUTION MARCELLO LOMBARDO 29 MAY 2017
THE EVOLUTION OF DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL DISTRIBUTION MARCELLO LOMBARDO (LOMBARDO@EBU.CH) 29 MAY 2017 CONTENT 1. MEDIA CONSUMPTION STATISTICS 2. THE EVOLUTION OF DIGITAL TERRESTRIAL TELEVISION 3. THE GROWTH
More informationSwitching to digital television
Switching to digital television The transition from analogue to digital television is well under way in a number of countries around the world. digital television allows for better picture and sound quality,
More informationGEO-Netcast White Paper Final Draft 9 December Improving access to data, products and services through GEOSS
GEO-Netcast White Paper Final Draft 9 December 2005 Improving access to data, products and services through GEOSS A concept presented to GEO II by EUMETSAT and NOAA 1 INTRODUCTION Ministers agreed at the
More informationSwitch off of Analogue Terrestrial Broadcasting. Standardization
Switch off of Analogue Terrestrial Broadcasting Standardization Talk overview DSO Relevant legislation Administrative capacity Demographic card, TV platforms in the RS Current and future activities in
More informationBroadband Changes Everything
Broadband Changes Everything OECD Roundtable On Communications Convergence UK Department of Trade and Industry Conference Centre London June 2-3, 2005 Michael Hennessy President Canadian Cable Telecommunications
More informationPIATTAFORME INDUSTRIALI DIGITALI EUROPEE
PIATTAFORME INDUSTRIALI DIGITALI EUROPEE Il contributo dei progetti CREATE-IoT e MONICA Giornata Nazionale di Lancio dei Bandi 2018-2020 in Horizon 2020 - LEIT ICT MAURIZIO A. SPIRITO Istituto Superiore
More informationITU Regional Development Forum for the Africa Region: "Spectrum and Broadcasting" Banjul (Gambia), July 2010
25-Jul-10 ITU Regional Development Forum for the Africa Region: "Spectrum and Broadcasting" Banjul (Gambia), 14-16 July 2010 Summary of the Forum The opening ceremony was followed by three sessions on
More informationIoT - Internet of Things. Brokerage event for Innovative ICT November, Varazdin, Croatia
IoT - Internet of Things Brokerage event for Innovative ICT 23-24 November, Varazdin, Croatia IoT Internet of Things What is this? Is it hype or reality? Will it influence our life? Which technology will
More informationWhy Connecting to the Internet of Things Project List
Why Connecting to the Internet of Things Should Top Your Project List Your things have a story to tell Are you listening? The Internet of Things (IoT) is made up of billions of smart devices, like sensors
More informationTransition from analogue to digital broadcasting
Transition from analogue to digital broadcasting Russell Southwood, CEO, Balancing Act Modern Spectrum Management and transition from Analogue to Digital Broadcasting -Trends and Technologies", Banjul,
More informationHow Cable and Telcos support large-scale IoT
How Cable and Telcos support large-scale IoT Perspectives and Strategies from NarrowNet SIGFOX Network Operator Enrique Zorzano IoT Week Lisbon, Industry Day, 17 th June 2015 How Cable and Telcos support
More information